Several Dota 2 teams that participated in last November's Northern Arena BEAT Invitational have yet to see their prize money from the tournament and the tournament organiser and event production staff say they haven't been paid for their services either.

According to a report from theScore Esports, several Dota 2 teams, including Complexity Gaming, Alliance, and Team NP, haven't received their prize winnings. We have reached out to some teams in attendance, and Complexity Gaming confirmed theScore's reporting.

In total, $US26,000 ($34,231) of the $US100,000 ($131,656) prize pool hasn't been paid out. All of the Counter-Strike teams at the event received their prize money, but only after repeated inquires to Northern Arena. According to a Complexity representative, the team was paid on February 17 for their Counter-Strike team winnings, but haven't heard from Northern Arena since Feb. 16.

Northern Arena played host to the BEAT Invitational, and it's important to recognise the distinction between the two. Northern Arena is the larger event, which featured both the BEAT Invitational -- put on by BEAT Gaming Corp, a Canadian esports organisation -- and a Counter-Strike tournament put on by the Canadian League of Gamers.

A representative from BEAT told us they had to front administrative fees and staff wages for the tournament -- which hasn't been reimbursed by Northern Arena -- and that all responsibility for prize money payouts and expenses of teams in attendance lies with Northern Arena.

Northern Arena CEO Carl-Edwin Michel disagrees BEAT's claims, telling theScore they are currently in a dispute over breach of contract.

Earlier today, Jack 'EternaLEnVy' Mao published a nearly 7,500 word blog post accusing leadership within Team Secret of being, well, secretive about how it handled prize money, sponsorship deals, and a whole host of other financial matters. His remarks were archived here after the traffic they originally generated crashed his blog.

Andrew "Zyori" Campbell, managing director of Dota 2 production studio Moonduck.TV, told theScore they were also owed money, and were planning on sending a legal notice to Northern Arena in order to force payment. Moonduck provided on-site talent for the event, including commentators and in-game camera operators.